Record Details
Field | Value |
---|---|
Title | Surface-subsurface geology of the middle to upper Eocene sedimentary and volcanic rock units, western Columbia County, northwest Oregon |
Names |
Berkman, Thomas Anthony
(creator) Niem, Alan R, (advisor) |
Date Issued | 1990-03-02 (iso8601) |
Note | Graduation date: 1990 |
Abstract | The middle to upper Eocene Tillamook Volcanics form the basement in the Rock Creek - Rocky Point area. These tholeiitic to alkalic basalts, basaltic andesites, and andesites were erupted as shield volcanoes seaward of the strandline ontop of an older deep-marine mudstone unit (Yamhill Formation) and an accreted portion of oceanic seafloor (lower Eocene Siletz River Volcanics). The subaerial flows are predominantly aphyric with subordinate plagioclase-augite porphyritic flows with pilotaxitic texture. The overlying Hamlet formation (informal) is composed of three members which document a marine transgression over subsiding islands of Tilamook Volcanics in the middle to late Eocene. The stratigraphically lowest Roy Creek member is composed of basaltic boulder to cobble conglomerate grading upward into fossiliferous pebbly basaltic sandstone deposited around sea stacks and along a high-energy rocky coastline composed of Tillamook Volcanics. Continued subsidence and transgression resulted in deposition of the Sunset Highway member of the Hamlet formation, which conformably overlies the Roy Creek member. The Sunset Highway member consists of interbedded micaceous arkosic sandstone and siltstone with rare basaltic grit beds occurring near the top of the member. Molluscan fauna, faint low-angle cross-bedding, parallel laminations and bioturbation in these sandstones are interpreted to represent deposition in a high-energy inner shelf environment. The upper Narizian (upper Eocene) Sweet Home Creek member conformably overlies the Sunset Highway member in western Columbia and eastern Clatsop counties and is composed of two lithofacies. The dominant lower facies consists of micromicaceous and carbonaceous silty mudstone which contains abundant Foraniinifera indicative of outer neritic to tipper bathyal water depths. Thin-bedded micaceous arkosic turbidite sandstones in nested channels of the upper facies are locally present near the top of the unit and represent deposits of a channelized shelf-slope break. Abrupt sea level regression coupled with increased sedimentation rates due to tectonic unroofing in source areas in Idaho and Washington resulted in abrupt shallowing of sedimentation before deposition of the overlying Cowlitz Formation (C & W sandstone member). The C & W sandstone in cores from the Mist Gas Field and outcrops in the Rock Creek - Rocky Point area in Columbia County consists of massive to hummocky bedded sandstone with some bioturbated siltstone and coal formed in a delta front complex ranging from brackish-water swamps to storm-wave-dominated lower shoreface environments. Sandstone onlaps basement highs of Tillamook Volcanics (Nehalem arch), resulting in a complicated facies geometry with some intrabasinal basaltic detritus. Sedimentary structures, statistical grain size analysis, and lithofacies associations suggest that strong wave processes reworked the delta front sands during a transgression at the seaward edge of the system. Thickening-upward and shallowing-upward sequences record periods of westward deltaic progradation and increasing storm-wave energy. C & W gas reservoirs consist of well-sorted, friable, fine-grained arkose to lithic arkose. Sandstone reservoir porosity and permeability average 31% and 1200 md, respectively. Porosity is dominated by primary intergranular pores which have been reduced by (1) compaction of ductile grains, (2) formation of minor mixed-layer clay rim cement, sparry calcite cement and authigenic pyrite, and (3) late stage precipitation of plagioclase, K-feldspar, and quartz overgrowths. However, partial dissolution of plagiociase feldspar has created some secondary porosity. Although arkosic sandstones have high porosities and correspondingly high permeabilities, chioritic cement in volcaniclastic-rich sandstones significantly reduces permeability without concomitant reduction in porosity. The Cole Mountain basalt (informal) locally intnides and overlies the Cowlitz Formation. These basalts to basaltic andesites have calc-alkaline affinities and consist of hypabyssal sills, submarine lava flows, and local peperites which are lithologically, chemically, and petrographically distinct from the slightly older Tillamook Volcanics. The uppermost Narizian to Refugian (latest Eocene) Keasey Formation unconfonnably overlies the Cowlitz Formation in the study area. Volcanic and glauconitic sandstones at the base of the Keasey Formation mark the unconformity and reflect a period of slow sedimentation under slightly reducing conditions. The Keasey Formation predominantly consists of stractureless, tuffaceous fossiliferous mudstone deposited by hemipelagic sedimentation on the middle to upper slope. The informal Miocene (?) Ivy Creek formation locally disconformably overlies the Keasey Formation in the study area. The fluvially deposited Ivy Creek formation consists of a friable upper trough cross-bedded pebbly sand fades which overlies 9 m of blue organic-rich overbank clay. Local pebbly grits in matrix-support with buried flow-oriented rooted tree stems suggest that some debris flows entered the fluvial system from surrounding highlands. The unit may correspond to the middle Miocene Scappoose Formation. Northwest-trending down-to-the-northeast high-angle faults, some with oblique offset, and a subordinate set of older east-trending faults are the dominant structural features of the Rock Creek - Rocky Point area. The faulting produces a dissected structural high or upthrown basement block of middle to upper Eocene Tillamook Volcanics. Upper Eocene sedimentary units flank the north and south sides with occasional perched sedimentary outliers along the volcanic crest. Although source rock evaluations from this study indicate that the upper Eocene samples are thermally immature, it is possible that thermogenic "thy" gas at Mist migrated updip from more deeply buried Cowlitz shales and coals or equivalent Eocene strata in the adjacent Tualatin and Astoria basins. |
Genre | Thesis |
Topic | Volcanic ash, tuff, etc. -- Oregon -- Columbia County |
Identifier | http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9481 |